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advice needed: buying a house from owner (without an agent)
Kate wrote:
I am thinking about buying a townhouse directly from the owner without an agent. But I am not sure how much is the lawyer fee and is this a smart choice. I am a first time home buyer, so don't know much about the process. For example, the closing fee, the owner said 50/50, what's the reasonable amount. the owner said it costs me about at least 10,000 less without an agent. the townhouse is 2 years old and the price is 305,000. please give any advice and I will appreciate. The seller is feeding you a bunch of bull****. The seller pays for any costs of agents, not you. And what is this "closing" fee he is so graciously willing to share with you? First time home buyers often really need the advice of a GOOD agent. Ask around the pople you work with and see if any of them recommend an agent. |
advice needed: buying a house from owner (without an agent)
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advice needed: buying a house from owner (without an agent)
On Tue, 19 Aug 2003 10:39:05 -0500, someone wrote:
First time home buyers often really need the advice of a GOOD agent. How about a good attorney instead? Why pay a sales commission for only partial advice (a real estate agent is not allowed to give legal advice, which OP surely will need). The legal fee will likely be far far less than the commission on a $300k purchase, and in most states a lawyer is used anyway, in addition to the agent. If you don't need an agent to find homes for you or sell for you, that's the one to skip. (BTW, I *do* use agents myself, I currently have 4 parcels listed for sale with agents, I feel they work for me and I don't have them time to make the sales efforts myself.) -v. |
advice needed: buying a house from owner (without an agent)
I agree that you should use a buyer's agent. I'm a first time house buyer
who would have been LOST without my agent--believe me, she earned every penny of her commission in answering questions, her knowledge about homes, and general hand-holding. She also was a great negotiator and got me a wonderful price plus additional money out of the seller after the inspection... Kirsten "John R Weiss" wrote in message t... "Kate" wrote... I am thinking about buying a townhouse directly from the owner without an agent. But I am not sure how much is the lawyer fee and is this a smart choice. I am a first time home buyer, so don't know much about the process. For example, the closing fee, the owner said 50/50, what's the reasonable amount. the owner said it costs me about at least 10,000 less without an agent. the townhouse is 2 years old and the price is 305,000. please give any advice and I will appreciate. Though I bought my first house (back in 1978, in a small town in TX) as a FSBO without an agent, and have bought and sold via both agents and FSBOs since then, I strongly recommend you find a buyer's agent and/or lawyer who will assist you for a straight fee, set in advance. Since you are apparently unfamiliar with the process, you are setting yourself up for big problems by trying to do it yourself. Since a real estate agent will have no advertising or sharing costs for this transaction, you should be able to get one to advise, assist, and represent you for a couple thousand dollars or less. Depending on where you live, use of an attorney may be advisable or required. Depending on the attorney, [s]he may be able to give you all the advice you would otherwise get from the real estate agent (though the attorney may not know the specific neighborhood/market as well). |
advice needed: buying a house from owner (without an agent)
Just my opinion, but from all my reading a good real estate attorney would
be fine, too, and quite possibly will charge less than a real estate agent. We've sold by owner twice and bought by owner once. The real estate attorney cost quite a bit less than an agent would have cost us as sellers. Our real estate attorney in a mid-size midwestern city is $90 per hour -- over the course of the sale, including a buyer backing out 6 days before closing, having to put it back on the market and then evaluate and negotiate with two buyers at the same time vying for our home, we will spend less than $1000 on the attorney. This was for a $200,000 home sale. Had we used an agent with this home we are currently selling, we would have raised the price at least $20,000. We probaby would not have recouped the full $14,000 an agent would have taken from a $200,000 sale, but we also would not have sold it for $200K -- so in effect we sort of "split" the savings -- the buyer got the house at a cheaper cost and we will pocket a little more when we close. We've been very up-front about all of this with our buyers (all three of them, lol!) When we bought by owner we felt we got the house for less than we would have had it been with an agent. We backed this up by looking at comparable sales in the neighborhood and also with an appraisal. A good real estate attorney is an excellent investment with or without an agent, imo. The attorney gets paid whether you buy/sell or not. The agent only gets paid if you buy/sell. To the OP -- the best way to know if you are truly buying the house for less than it would sell for with an agent is to get an appraisal and then back that up by looking at comparable sales. In many communities you can seek recent sales in the same neighborhood through the real estate tax website. (I'd think comparing townhomes would be even easier than trying to compare homes). Hope this helps, and good luck. -Dawn |
advice needed: buying a house from owner (without an agent)
On Tue, 19 Aug 2003 15:55:54 GMT, "Caliban"
wrote: Yeahbut the seller passes along that cost to the buyer. And the objective of most if not all sellers who offer a house FSBO is to sell the house for the same price as one being handled by agents and keep the profit that otherwise would be spent to pay the agent's commission! I've sold twice by owner and that was not my objective either time. My objective was to recoup *some* of the 7 percent the realtor would have earned, but not all of it. YMMV. -Dawn |
advice needed: buying a house from owner (without an agent)
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advice needed: buying a house from owner (without an agent)
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advice needed: buying a house from owner (without an agent)
On Wed, 20 Aug 2003 21:12:05 GMT, someone wrote:
"Escrow Companies/Agents" were not used to effect the transfer of property. And may I point out that what in some areas are referred to as "title companies" are really "escrow agents", and that in other areas a "title company" is something else entirely, like a "title insurance company"... -v. |
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